North East Indian Linguistics Volume 3 presents the latest in descriptive and anthropological linguistic research on the languages of the North East Indian region. Long acknowledged to be among the culturally and linguistically richest and most diverse regions of all Asia , North East India also remains to this day one of the least well-studied and well-understood. The collection of papers in this volume directly address this problem by presenting description and analysis of a wide variety of phonological, syntactic, morphological, sociolinguistic and historical topics in the study of several languages of the region.

This volume reflects the current state of research in North East Indian Linguistics on the parts of local, national and international scholars alike and will be of interest to linguists, anthropologists, and other social scientists and general readers with an interest in the study, preservation and appreciation of North East Indian cultural and linguistic diversity.

Contents
About the Contributors Foreword A Note from the Editors The View from Manipur 1. Person-Marking Prefixes of Purum 2. The Evolution and Recent Development of the Meitei Mayek Script The Sal Group 3. Three Meanings of “Language” and “Dialect” in North East India 4. An Initial Reconstruction of the Proto-Bodo-Garo Noun Phrase 5. Nocte and Jingphaw: Morphological Correspondences 6. Tangsa Agreement Markers Tibeto-Burman Nominalization 7. Nominalization and Related Phenomena in Marma 8. Functions of Nominalization in Karbi Tani 9. Topographical Deixis and the Tani Languages of North East India 10. Morphosyntactic Variation in the Pagro and Sa:ja ? Dialects of the Mising Community Eastern Indo-Aryan 11. The Referring Systems and the Determinative Elements of Noun Phrases in Assamese 12. Copular Sentences in Asamiya 13. Case Marking in Hajong Austroasiatic 14. Derivational Morphology in Pnar

Author/Editor Details
Edited by:
GwendolynHyslop, is a specialist in the East Bodish languages of Bhutan and Arunachal Pradesh.
Edited by:
StephenMorey, is Associate Director of the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology at La Trobe University.
Edited by:
Mark W.Post, Post is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Anthropological Linguistics at The Cairns Institute of James Cook University in Cairns, Australia.